Using IASIP for this meme is pretty silly, considering everyone on that show (except for maybe Mac) has a seemingly unlimited amount of money via Frank.
The opposite of Nouveau Riche: Nouveau Pauvre. They lack the culture of people who were born into poverty.
I legitimately think this is a thing.
I suspect folks who grew up with door dash see it as a normalized service. I grew up poor before it was a thing, and even though I’m financially better now it’s only used when we’re absolutely pooped.
There are just… So many more entrenched predatory services now that only serve to extract money more efficiently. All that klarna “buy now pay later” stuff? Absolutely deadly if someone doesn’t know how to budget.
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A relevant discussion on the topic: https://youtube.com/watch?v=05RZJxDIhTU
Full blown shanty town
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As someone who went poverty -> comfortable -> not so well off, I can confirm. It was (mentally) easier to get up from the bottom than to deal with the loss and try to do it all over again and risk even further loss.
As the old curse says - May you have and then not have.
I married a trust fund kid and then got saddled with his credit card debt after he dumped me.
Got to go on nice expensive vacations, ate ridiculous food on the top of Harrod’s in London. Now I’m making pillows out of old t-shirts because I don’t have a mattress.
The big lesson I learned is that it actually does not matter how smart, talented or hard working you are. It’s about having rich family.
Bro you can just go to the salvation army, you don’t have to wear pillows as tshirts LMAO 🤣
You have it backwards. They’re using old t-shirts to sew pillows. The same way some people use old shirts for quilting, or for window cleaning rags.
Damn, then it clearly shows this guy privilege, poverty related.
No poor person is thinking about comfort when sleeping, but being dressed and covered from the elements? Yeah that ranks higher
I feel like Salvation Army pillows are going to be gross and hard to clean - might pick up bed bugs. Thrifting the stuffing/pillow forms and sewing them into t-shirts makes something quick and comfortable.
Tom Wolfe said that if a person goes from middle class to homeless in a shelter their life changes 50%. They still have the same clothes, watch the same TV shows, eat the same kind of food.
If someone goes from being a billionaire to middle class their life has changed 100%.
…he said, drinking his Starbucks coffee
That’s gas station coffee. Talk about new poor.
oh so there is they also a chance they have a car
How so?
Quitting coffee has never make anyone rich. That’s not a cost that kills you.
That’s not a cost that kills you.
For real.
Some folks have a vice where they can’t start a single day without a fancy grande latte or whatever, but mostly when I see that, it’s middle-managey types that make more in a month than I’d ever see in my account at any given time.
How many skipped small vanilla cold-brews or boba teas (+a tip for my fellow working class ✊) buys an average healthcare deductible or car repair beyond my DIY abilities? Heck let’s lower the bar…An oil change?
Just filling the tank costs like 8 enjoyable refreshing coffees. What a lame exchange rate!
Even if we struggle, it’s still okay to enjoy things once in a while.
Found a new poor.
Stole it.
Are you implying that the poor should be denied luxury items?
Aren’t luxury items supposed to be high quality?
Are you dumb? thanks
You think old poor don’t have crushing credit card debt?
those don’t look like Starbucks cups? Aren’t the only brown parts on a smaller sleeve? This cup looks mostly brown?
These Nouveau Pauvre can’t tell a gas station French vanilla from a Starbucks caramel macchiato
i used “Starbucks” in a “generic expensive coffee to go”- way
Ironically poor people tend to put more emphasis on buying name brands, certainly for things that other people see, like clothes, vehicles etc.
Value signaling is a thing.
My dad grew up poor and he can’t stand going to budget stores like Aldi and Lidl. It’s almost a matter of principe for him, he can afford to go to the more expensive store so he will.
It’s the whole “couponing is only trashy if you’re poor” mentality.
For the rich, couponing is a game. See how much you can get, for as little as possible. You have the storage space for it, so you’re not worried about excess or waste. All you care about is gaming the system to see what you can get. You had to buy 18 months worth of laundry detergent to get the discount? That’s fine, cuz you have space for it at home. And your basic necessities are already covered, so the coupons don’t need to be for staples that you’ll use quickly or regularly.
For the poor, couponing is a necessary evil. You’re eating chicken every day this week; Not because you really like chicken, but because it’s what you had a coupon for. And now you need to eat it before it goes bad, because you need the space in the fridge for this week’s coupons and you can’t afford to simply toss it out.
Yeah but it’s also: logos on clothes are huge on items marketed to poorer people. You won’t find old money walking around in overtly branded clothes. They do buy better quality stuff, but the branding is less important.
This sounds like a Nouveau Riche thing because your dad now has money to spend. If he can go to Whole Foods over Aldi, he ain’t pauvre.
It’s not only my father in taking about